Artist Roberta Ruiz writes:
“The amount of work and the breath of images that Eduardo Carrillo created were not apparent to all of us who knew him at the university. He was understated, nurturing, and easy in his demeanor. When looking at his work I “get†the outrageousness of living, while recording your thoughts and impressions in paint and being totally committed to doing it. His paintings have modesty, humor and a biting reserve.
‘Eduardoâ€
“In Las Tropicanas, a painting with a complex structure, Ed creates an unexpected clash of figures embedded into their environment within his own personal mythology. Itâ€
“In the Flight of Sor Juana, Sor Juana is flung over the chair; the color – hot pastel. She is in ecstasy beneath the Crucifix. The shadow on the cross above the chest holds the space for Christâ€
“A similar humor surfaces in El Chinaco. Historically, a Chinaco was a mestizo of humble origins, a guerrelliero who fashioned a place for himself of personal independence and culture. Here in Edâ€
Reaching for Coatlique. In the myth of the Aztecs, Coatlique is the earth and loving mother producing and consuming everything that lives. In the painting the two figures are lying, twisting horizontally, she with a snake wrapped around her arm, reaching out. He goes for the snake. His fingers almost touch it’s head. The patterned cloth sets the space. Simple?
More of Roberta’s writings can be found in a forthcoming catalogue on Edwardo Carrillo.